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Japanese Yen erodes a part of Tuesday's upward move amid positive risk tone

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Japanese Yen erodes a part of Tuesday's upward move amid positive risk tone

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New update 2025.03.26 11:46
Japanese Yen erodes a part of Tuesday's upward move amid positive risk tone

update 2025.03.26 11:46

  • The Japanese Yen attracts some intraday sellers on Wednesday, though it lacks follow-through. 
  • The divergent BoJ-Fed expectations should cap USD/JPY amid subdued USD price action.
  • Traders also seem reluctant ahead of the Tokyo CPI and the US PCE Price Index on Friday.

The Japanese Yen (JPY) ticked lower during the Asian session on Wednesday following the release of the Japan Service Producer Price Index (PPI), which eased to the 3.0% YoY rate in February. This, along with a generally positive tone around the equity markets, undermines the safe-haven JPY and lifts the USD/JPY pair back above the 150.00 psychological mark in the last hour. However, any meaningful JPY depreciation seems elusive amid bets that strong wage growth would underpin consumption and filter into broader inflation trends, which should allow the Bank of Japan (BoJ) to continue raising interest rates

The hawkish outlook was reaffirmed by the January BoJ meeting minutes released on Tuesday, which showed that policymakers discussed the pace of raising interest rates. This marks a big divergence in comparison to the Federal Reserve's (Fed) forecast for two 25-basis-points rate cuts in 2025. The resultant narrowing of the Japan-US rate differential should act as a tailwind for the lower-yielding JPY, which, along with subdued US Dollar (USD) price action, cap the USD/JPY pair. Traders might also opt to wait for the release of the Tokyo CPI and the US Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) Price Index on Friday. 

Japanese Yen is undermined by positive risk tone; BoJ rate hike bets should help limit deeper losses

  • The Bank of Japan reported earlier this Wednesday that the Services Producer Price Index (PPI) - a leading indicator of Japan's service-sector inflation - rose 3.0% from a year earlier in February. The reading was slightly below the 3.1% increase in January. On a monthly basis, the index remained flat during the reported month after falling 0.5% in January. 
  • Moreover, BoJ Governor Kazuo Ueda reiterated that the central bank will continue to raise interest rates if economic and price developments move in line with forecasts made in the quarterly outlook report. Adding to this, significant wage hikes for the third consecutive year keep alive expectations of further interest rate hikes by the Japanese central bank.
  • In contrast, the Federal Reserve signaled last week that it would deliver two 25-basis-point interest rate cuts by the end of this year. Meanwhile, the Fed gave a bump higher to its inflation projection, though it revised the growth outlook downward amid the growing uncertainty over the impact of US President Donald Trump's aggressive trade policies. 
  • Trump is expected to announce so-called retaliatory tariffs - that offset levies on US goods and are set to take effect on April 2 - on about 15 major US trading partners. Furthermore, Trump imposed a secondary tariff on Venezuela and said that any country that buys oil or gas from Venezuela would face a 25% tariff when trading with the US.
  • The increasing pessimism about the US economy led to a sharp downturn in the US Consumer Confidence, which dropped for a fourth straight month in March. The Conference Board's survey further revealed that the Expectations Index fell to 65.2, or the lowest level in 12 years and well below the threshold of 80 that usually signals a recession ahead.
  • This, in turn, prompted a modest US Dollar pullback from a nearly three-week high touched on Tuesday and weighed heavily on the USD/JPY pair. The USD bulls failed to gain any respite from Fed Governor Adriana Kugler's hawkish remarks, saying that the progress toward returning inflation to the 2% target has slowed since last summer.
  • Several Fed officials are set to speak in the coming days and will play a key role in influencing the USD price dynamics. In the meantime, traders will look to Wednesday's release of US Durable Goods Orders for short-term impetus. The focus, however, remains on the US Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) Price Index on Friday. 

USD/JPY needs to find acceptance above the 151.00 mark to support prospects for additional gains

From a technical perspective, this week's breakout above the 200-period Simple Moving Average (SMA) on the 4-hour chart was seen as a key trigger for bullish traders. Moreover, oscillators on the daily chart have just started gaining positive traction and suggest that the path of least resistance for the USD/JPY pair is to the upside. However, the overnight failure ahead of the 151.00 mark warrants some caution. Hence, it will be prudent to wait for sustained strength and acceptance above the said handle before positioning for an extension of the recent recovery from a multi-month low. The subsequent move-up could lift spot prices beyond the monthly top, around the 151.30 area, towards the 152.00 round figure.

On the flip side, the 149.55 area, or the overnight swing low, now seems to protect the immediate downside, below which the USD/JPY pair could slide to the 149.00 mark en route to the 148.75-148.70 support. The latter coincides with the 100-period SMA on the 4-hour chart, which if broken might shift the bias in favor of bearish traders. Spot prices might then accelerate the fall towards the 148.00 round figure and slide further towards the 147.35-147.30 region before eventually dropping below the 147.00 mark, towards the 146.55-146.50 area, or the multi-month low touched on March 11.

Economic Indicator

Corporate Service Price Index (YoY)

The Corporate Service Price Index (CSPI) released by the Bank of Japan measures the prices of services traded among companies. It presents price developments that reflect most sensitively the supply and demand conditions in the services market. It is also considered as an indicator for inflationary pressures. Normally, a high reading is seen as positive (or bullish) for the JPY, while a low reading is seen as negative (or bearish).

Read more.

Last release: Tue Mar 25, 2025 23:50

Frequency: Monthly

Actual: 3%

Consensus: -

Previous: 3.1%

Source: Bank of Japan

 


Date

Created

 : 2025.03.26

Update

Last updated

 : 2025.03.26

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